$DBS(D05.SI)  https://www.theedgesingapore.com/capital/brokers-calls/stock-not-just-...
I am turning bullish as the bank seems to be best performer among the 3 although we are still waiting for OCBC. Definitely a good job to beat on earnings in this difficult Q2.

Technically, it is also testing the bearish trendline, a further jump up could indicate a reversal in trend !

 
I am turning bullish as the bank seems to be best performer among the 3 although we are still waiting for OCBC. Definitely a good job to beat on earnings in this difficult Q2.

Technically, it is also testing the bearish trendline, a further jump up could indicate a reversal in trend !

 
Let' s hope it is at least $0.15.
FATABA ( Date: 06-Aug-2020 13:05) Posted:
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UOB' s earnings dropped more than DBS, according to today' s earning release.
Note that the hit seems not over yet. Provisions against bad loans in the second quarter surged to S$396 million, compared with just S$51 million a year ago and the bank guided for total provisions to remain between S$2 to S$3 billion for " the next few quarters" . It could indicate that this uncertainties could weigh on the stock longer than we think.
I am still bearish and looking for a good level to short it. How do you guys think?

Note that the hit seems not over yet. Provisions against bad loans in the second quarter surged to S$396 million, compared with just S$51 million a year ago and the bank guided for total provisions to remain between S$2 to S$3 billion for " the next few quarters" . It could indicate that this uncertainties could weigh on the stock longer than we think.
I am still bearish and looking for a good level to short it. How do you guys think?

yes , base on GE contribution ,,, it shld be better ...my guess is 15 dividend n drop of aro 20% profit 
CheeryVGoh ( Date: 06-Aug-2020 12:54) Posted:
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Guess OCBC result should be better than UOB.
:)
 
:)
 
FATABA ( Date: 06-Aug-2020 09:52) Posted:
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All 3 banks up .......let hope it hold well for the long weekend. 
Dyodd
Dyodd
Now with this set of result .....I can comprehend why UOB is lower then DBS nowadays .( use to be higher then DBS before the pandemic ) 
DBS did well esp considering the much larger allowances set aside / if not it wld be up 12% 
Considering the C19 situation ....this is something all other banks wld envy. 
Dyodd
DBS did well esp considering the much larger allowances set aside / if not it wld be up 12% 
Considering the C19 situation ....this is something all other banks wld envy. 
Dyodd
DBS pay 18c for the qtr....actually above expectation w $1.26B set aside ? wow before allowance is up 12% 
FIRST-HALF NET PROFIT DECLINES 26% OR SGD 0.84 BILLION TO SGD 2.41 BILLION AS GENERAL ALLOWANCES OF SGD 1.26 BILLION CONSERVATIVELY SET ASIDE * * * Profit before allowances up 12% to new high of SGD 4.71 billion
SINGAPORE, 6 August 2020 &ndash DBS Group reported first-half 2020 net profit of SGD 2.41 billion, 26% lower than a year ago. Total allowances increased five-fold to SGD 1.94 billion as general allowances of SGD 1.26 billion were conservatively set aside to fortify the balance sheet against risks arising from the Covid-19 pandemic. 
UOB dividend is 39% ( better then I expected ) ...but its result is average w headwind ...allowance set aside much smaller then DBS
UOB reports S$1.56 billion in net profit for first half of 2020 maintains strong balance sheet amid challenging economic conditions Sets aside S$379 million allowance in second quarter in view of COVID-19 impact
Singapore, 6 August 2020 - UOB Group (&ldquo Group&rdquo ) reported net earnings of S$1.56 billion for the first half of 2020 (&ldquo 1H20&rdquo ), 30% lower than a year ago. Net earnings for the second quarter of 2020 (&ldquo 2Q20&rdquo ) stood at S$703 million, 18% and 40% lower than the first quarter of 2020 (&ldquo 1Q20&rdquo ) and the second quarter of 2019 (&ldquo 2Q19&rdquo ) respectively. The performance was impacted by declining margins and pre-emptive credit provisioning as the effects of the pandemic rippled through the global economy. 
 
FIRST-HALF NET PROFIT DECLINES 26% OR SGD 0.84 BILLION TO SGD 2.41 BILLION AS GENERAL ALLOWANCES OF SGD 1.26 BILLION CONSERVATIVELY SET ASIDE * * * Profit before allowances up 12% to new high of SGD 4.71 billion
SINGAPORE, 6 August 2020 &ndash DBS Group reported first-half 2020 net profit of SGD 2.41 billion, 26% lower than a year ago. Total allowances increased five-fold to SGD 1.94 billion as general allowances of SGD 1.26 billion were conservatively set aside to fortify the balance sheet against risks arising from the Covid-19 pandemic. 
UOB dividend is 39% ( better then I expected ) ...but its result is average w headwind ...allowance set aside much smaller then DBS
UOB reports S$1.56 billion in net profit for first half of 2020 maintains strong balance sheet amid challenging economic conditions Sets aside S$379 million allowance in second quarter in view of COVID-19 impact
Singapore, 6 August 2020 - UOB Group (&ldquo Group&rdquo ) reported net earnings of S$1.56 billion for the first half of 2020 (&ldquo 1H20&rdquo ), 30% lower than a year ago. Net earnings for the second quarter of 2020 (&ldquo 2Q20&rdquo ) stood at S$703 million, 18% and 40% lower than the first quarter of 2020 (&ldquo 1Q20&rdquo ) and the second quarter of 2019 (&ldquo 2Q19&rdquo ) respectively. The performance was impacted by declining margins and pre-emptive credit provisioning as the effects of the pandemic rippled through the global economy. 
 
Seem like all 3 banks are running up in anticipation of its result tmr n Friday .....whatever, any dividend above the recommended cap of 60% 
wld b a positive .  Keeping finger cross 
Dyodd
wld b a positive .  Keeping finger cross 
Dyodd
FATABA ( Date: 04-Aug-2020 15:06) Posted:
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all 3 banks recover some of their drop ........again the BB gain from buying in and awaiting the coming result . 
Let see ?
DYODD
Let see ?
DYODD
Singapore banks' results to reflect double whammy of low rates, weak growth
Anshuman Daga
Reuters4 August 2020
 
By Anshuman Daga
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Singapore banks are likely to report their average net interest margins fell the most quarter-on-quarter in 18 years as interest rates weakened, while profits on the year are seen taking a hit from the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and weak asset quality.
Uninspiring results could add to investor disenchantment with the lenders, the biggest in Southeast Asia, after the city-state' s central bank capped their dividends last week, sparking a sell-off in their shares.
The market' s focus when DBS Group < DBSM.SI> and its two smaller rivals report results this week will be on any signs that the June quarter marked the trough for net interest margins, a key measure of profitability, as economies emerge from months of lockdown.
" We expect banks' profit to moderate over the near term due mainly to higher provisioning costs and low interest rates," said Shao Keng Ang,  senior credit analyst at Eastspring Investments.
Second-quarter profit at DBS, which has state investor Temasek Holdings [TEM.UL] as its biggest investor, is set to rise nearly 3% to S$1.19 billion (662.41 million pounds) from a quarter ago but slump about 25% on the year, according to the average estimate of five analysts, Refinitiv data shows.
" We forecast a 19 basis points q-o-q average decline for the Singapore banks on the back of a collapse in Singapore short-end rates as well as lower interest rates in the regions that the Singapore banks operate in," Goldman Sachs analysts said in a report, referring to net interest margins, adding that the declines would be the biggest since 2002.
Net interest margins of DBS, OCBC < OCBC.SI> and United Overseas Bank < UOBH.SI> are estimated at between 1.55% to 1.64% for the quarter, according to Refinitiv data.
OCBC' s net profit is set to advance 40% from a quarter ago, helped by higher trading income and gains from its insurance unit. On the year, analysts expect profit to fall 20%.
Refinitiv data shows UOB' s quarterly profit is estimated to fall on the quarter and from a year earlier.
Key points
Conclusion
MAS  issued a statement  capping dividend distributions at 60% of FY19 levels and requiring scrip as an option. MQ has cut its DPS assumptions for all three banks, leading to a 4% average yield for the banks in 2020. Whilst valuations remain appealing and the banks do have good defensive attributes (strong liquidity and deposit flows, high capital starting point), a key catalyst has been removed.
Near-term the shares could respond negatively, especially for DBS where an approximate 25% valuation premium exists, in part due to confidence on dividends.
Impact
Yields move from less than 6% to 4% on average.  MQ has cut DPS for the Singapore banks accordingly. The circular states that where an interim was paid for 1Q20, the throttle on dividends shall apply through 1Q21 distribution, and MQ has reflected this for its DBS estimates for 2021.
Any scrip discount will determine how much is paid out.  MQ&rsquo s view had been, and remains, capital levels are ample for the outlook the banks had provided and the regulator had also recently agreed capital levels were unquestionably strong in its stress test.
Thus the banks shouldn&rsquo t require the capital near term, and all else equal will see approximately 0.2% higher CET-1 capital ratio by 1Q21 as a consequence. This augurs for a 0% discount on scrip, however in practice in recent years, the scrip discount has been as high as 10% which yielded approximately 80% take-up from shareholders. For now, MQ assumes all dividends are paid out, but this depends on the level of scrip discount provided.
Regulators globally have been responding on dividends.  The MAS move needs to be taken in context with several advanced economy financial regulators reviewing dividend policy in recent days.
Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) had previously required deferment and has  just now permitted  maximum 50% payouts. The European Central Bank has extended a freeze on all dividends until January and the Bank of England is considering extending its freeze also, according to  media reports. All regulators globally are pondering a longer and deeper recession and the need to avail capital to support lending.
Value is on offer, but crimped yields are a negative
Whilst valuations remain appealing and the banks have good defensive attributes (strong deposit flows, high capital to begin with), a key catalyst has been removed. DBS had been the most committed dividend payer.
MQ has  previously highlighted  OCBC as a likely beat candidate on earnings due to Great Eastern, and Great Eastern&rsquo s standalone reporting seems to confirm this.
- MQ maintains an Outperform rating for DBS with a revised price target of S$24.25/share
- MQ maintains an Outperform rating for OCBC with a revised price target of S$10.65/share
- MQ maintains a Neutral rating for UOB with an unchanged price target of S$21.00/share
All target prices above are based on a price-to-book methodology.
- MAS has formally adjudicated on dividends, capping distributions at 60% of Financial year 2019 (FY19) payouts and requiring banks to offer scrip in lieu of cash.
- MQ reduces expected dividend yields from less than 6% to 4%. Still attractive in a low rate environment, but not as much as previously anticipated.
- Valuations remain inexpensive, but an important near-term catalyst (confirmation of flat dividends-per-share (DPS)) has now been removed.
Conclusion
MAS  issued a statement  capping dividend distributions at 60% of FY19 levels and requiring scrip as an option. MQ has cut its DPS assumptions for all three banks, leading to a 4% average yield for the banks in 2020. Whilst valuations remain appealing and the banks do have good defensive attributes (strong liquidity and deposit flows, high capital starting point), a key catalyst has been removed.
Near-term the shares could respond negatively, especially for DBS where an approximate 25% valuation premium exists, in part due to confidence on dividends.
Impact
Yields move from less than 6% to 4% on average.  MQ has cut DPS for the Singapore banks accordingly. The circular states that where an interim was paid for 1Q20, the throttle on dividends shall apply through 1Q21 distribution, and MQ has reflected this for its DBS estimates for 2021.
Any scrip discount will determine how much is paid out.  MQ&rsquo s view had been, and remains, capital levels are ample for the outlook the banks had provided and the regulator had also recently agreed capital levels were unquestionably strong in its stress test.
Thus the banks shouldn&rsquo t require the capital near term, and all else equal will see approximately 0.2% higher CET-1 capital ratio by 1Q21 as a consequence. This augurs for a 0% discount on scrip, however in practice in recent years, the scrip discount has been as high as 10% which yielded approximately 80% take-up from shareholders. For now, MQ assumes all dividends are paid out, but this depends on the level of scrip discount provided.
Regulators globally have been responding on dividends.  The MAS move needs to be taken in context with several advanced economy financial regulators reviewing dividend policy in recent days.
Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) had previously required deferment and has  just now permitted  maximum 50% payouts. The European Central Bank has extended a freeze on all dividends until January and the Bank of England is considering extending its freeze also, according to  media reports. All regulators globally are pondering a longer and deeper recession and the need to avail capital to support lending.
Value is on offer, but crimped yields are a negative
Whilst valuations remain appealing and the banks have good defensive attributes (strong deposit flows, high capital to begin with), a key catalyst has been removed. DBS had been the most committed dividend payer.
MQ has  previously highlighted  OCBC as a likely beat candidate on earnings due to Great Eastern, and Great Eastern&rsquo s standalone reporting seems to confirm this.
- MQ maintains an Outperform rating for DBS with a revised price target of S$24.25/share
- MQ maintains an Outperform rating for OCBC with a revised price target of S$10.65/share
- MQ maintains a Neutral rating for UOB with an unchanged price target of S$21.00/share
All target prices above are based on a price-to-book methodology.
We were know by Thur n Friday .  Base on Sgx trading vol ....we can est. 
AUM is still a gd portion of our banks ...its the provision that they plan to take ..which will affect this 1H margin greatly and also tell the confident of the 2H 
Dyodd...awaiting patiently .
AUM is still a gd portion of our banks ...its the provision that they plan to take ..which will affect this 1H margin greatly and also tell the confident of the 2H 
Dyodd...awaiting patiently .
Siwomp ( Date: 04-Aug-2020 07:57) Posted:
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will the be bad debt write off, especially from credit cards, many went jobless not sure can pay up bo, number might looks nicer due to high interest charges. Last crisis we see many young people in trouble due to over spend on future money n lost of jobs.
FATABA ( Date: 03-Aug-2020 17:45) Posted:
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I am relatively certain , all 3 are still profitable .....maybe 30% drop in profit ....all depends on the size of provision taken. 
Actually without MAS interference ....I am certain at least DBS n OCBC can pay out as in 2019 ....as they hv the cash n payout ratio is still low. 
As such / barring a GLOBAL virus mass issue where many countries shut down again/NO vaccine till end 2021........I think all 3 banks might 
recover in 2H 2021 and even pay a special dividend again ......also this MIGHT be a good opportunity for buy out of weaker banks in the region . 
( of course ...if global cold war etc etc then all is out )  DYODD
Awaiting thur morning n Fri .
Actually without MAS interference ....I am certain at least DBS n OCBC can pay out as in 2019 ....as they hv the cash n payout ratio is still low. 
As such / barring a GLOBAL virus mass issue where many countries shut down again/NO vaccine till end 2021........I think all 3 banks might 
recover in 2H 2021 and even pay a special dividend again ......also this MIGHT be a good opportunity for buy out of weaker banks in the region . 
( of course ...if global cold war etc etc then all is out )  DYODD
Awaiting thur morning n Fri .
Siwomp ( Date: 03-Aug-2020 16:31) Posted:
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Dividend cap on Singapore banks to weigh down sentiment
MON, AUG 03, 2020 - 5:50 AM
 
DBS and UOB will report their Q2 earnings and interim dividends on Aug 6, while OCBC will wrap up the results season on Aug 7. 
PHOTO: BT FILE
Singapore
ANALYSTS have reset their dividend estimates for Singapore banks in the upcoming second-quarter results, while also projecting for sharp dips in share prices in the near term, after the regulator nudged banks to cap their dividends.
In a move to shore up capital amid the uncertain economic climate, the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) last Wednesday called on local banks to cap their total dividends per share (DPS) for FY2020 at 60 per cent of the amount in the previous financial year. Shareholders should also be offered the option of receiving the dividends to be paid for FY2020 in scrip in lieu of cash.
Jefferies analyst Krishna Guha viewed this move as a significant change as earlier, the regulator " didn' t see a need" to restrict banks' dividend policies and had " refrained from being prescriptive" .
 
This is likely to weigh on sentiment as the yield for local banks will be capped at around 4 per cent - compared with 6 per cent earlier - as well as associated dilution from the scrip scheme, Mr Guha noted.
 
He has lowered FY2020 dividend estimates for DBS by 29 per cent to 87 Singapore cents OCBC by 33 per cent to 31 cents and UOB by 13 per cent to 78 cents.
UOB KayHian analyst Jonathan Koh is expecting a " kneejerk drop" in the banks' share prices in the near term following MAS' s announcement.
" Based on required dividend yield of 4 per cent, we see buying support for DBS at S$18.45, OCBC at S$7.95, and UOB at S$19.50," said Mr Koh.
Shares of the three local banks tumbled after MAS nudged the banks to cap their dividend payout. DBS shares closed on Thursday 63 cents lower at S$19.77, OCBC shares fell 34 cents to S$8.56, and UOB shares dropped 63 cents to S$19.39.
DBS and UOB will report their Q2 earnings and interim dividends on Aug 6, while OCBC will wrap up the results season on Aug 7.
CGS-CIMB analyst Andrea Choong said DBS could see relatively more share price pressure compared to its local peers, as its dividends were a key investment thesis previously. UOB could be least affected by this announcement given lower expectations from investors.
Citi analyst Robert Kong also said the dividend cap will be particularly impactful for DBS, which " positively surprised" in Q1 with a quarterly DPS payout of 33 cents and S$1.32 annualised. " It was one reason in our view why the stock had outperformed its peers."
A DBS spokesperson said the new cap restricts its cumulative dividends to 72 cents per share for the next four quarters starting from Q2 2020, or 18 cents per quarter - with all dividends subject to board approval.
According to MAS, if a bank has already paid out interim dividends for Q1 2020, the dividend restrictions and the offering of dividends in scrip will be extended for an additional quarter until Q1 2021. The 60 per cent cap will apply to the revised period, but still reference FY2019.
DBS analyst Lim Rui Wen cautioned that lower DPS - which in turn translate to lower dividend yields of around 3.6 to 3.9 per cent - could dampen the local banks' valuation support levels.
" We believe that Singapore banks' valuation, now trading at around 0.8 to 1.0 times estimated FY2021 book value, was supported by their relatively high dividend yields," she said.
OCBC Investment Research said: " While valuations are undemanding for long-term investors, we see limited catalysts in the near term and expect a more meaningful sector performance when the macro growth outlook picks up."
Goldman Sachs Equity Research' s latest dividend guidance for OCBC and UOB implies a payout ratio of 42 per cent and 48 per cent respectively.
OCBC' s dividend payout ratio stood at 47 per cent in FY2019, while UOB maintains a dividend payout ratio policy of about 50 per cent of earnings, subject to a minimum CET1 ratio of 13.5 per cent.
OCBC chief Samuel Tsien last week said the bank will " heed the call" by MAS on dividend restrictions, while UOB group chief financial officer Lee Wai Fai said the bank supports the precautionary move.
Citi' s Mr Kong noted that if the banks " follow the full spirit" of MAS' s guidance, DPS will be 100 per cent subject to a scrip dividend scheme. The scrip will likely be offered at a discount to market price to encourage share take-up.
" This will add to Q2 results pain where we have already predicted that the banks could see sharp quarter-on-quarter falls in reported NIMs (net interest margins)," he said. The banks' Q2 NIMs are widely expected to be near their all-time post-global financial crisis low.
While the dividend cap will lead to short-term downward pressure on share prices, analysts say the move by MAS will place Singapore banks in a stronger position to see through prolonged economic pain.
" We think it is reassuring that MAS has noted the banks' current capital are sufficient even if a more adverse macro situation materialises," said Goldman Sachs analysts Melissa Kuang and Siward Ludin.
As at Q1, DBS, OCBC and UOB' s CET1 ratio stood at 13.9 per cent, 14.3 per cent and 14.1 per cent respectively, among the highest across Asean banks.
Based on DBS' s Ms Lim' s estimates, the dividend cap will add 0.2 to 0.3 per cent to projected CET1 ratio as at end-FY2020.
Should the pandemic situation stabilise and the economic outlook improve over the next two years, DBS' s Ms Lim expects Singapore banks to eventually pay out special dividends if their CET1 ratios remain " well above" pre-virus levels.
UOB KayHian' s Mr Koh has tentatively projected for FY2021 DPS to be 80 per cent that of FY2019. He is looking at DBS producing a dividend yield of 4.3 per cent for FY2020 and 4.4 per cent for FY2021, and OCBC to see 3.6 per cent and 4.7 per cent respectively.
Jefferies' Mr Guha said the dividend cap will conserve an estimated S$3 billion of capital - or 40 per cent of FY2019 dividends - and result in S$30 billion of lending at 10 times leverage.
" If MAS' s worry is stemming from potential fallout from expiry of the Jobs Support Scheme in August and planned easing of moratoria by year-end, extension of credit should provide reprieve for industrial and retail SMEs in the near term," he noted.
UOB KayHian' s Mr Koh reckoned that the second wave of infections in the US and Japan had prompted MAS to make the pre-emptive move to ensure the banks have sufficient capital.
OCBC Investment Research said mandating prudence on capital usage is largely in line with regulators' cautious stance globally, reflecting the extent of the pandemic' s impact on asset quality deterioration.
" Singapore banks are still relatively less constrained than European banks, for example, which have been restricted on all dividends and share buybacks this year."
Over the longer term, DBS is CGS-CIMB' s top sector pick for its " firepower" in sustained trading and investment gains, which should offset some negative sentiment.
OCBC may surprise on the upside from a rebound in portfolio revaluations from Great Eastern Holdings, said CGS-CIMB' s Ms Choong.
Thur and Friday morning will be interesting for STI due to the bank results .
Actually ALL 3 banks can afford to pay the full value of its dividend as per 2019 this 1H 2020 / but due to MAS cap request. 
( their pay out ratio is aro 50%) 
Further GE alrdy has a nice set of result .....moving forward, a large provision wld be a factor but come 2021 
I guess shareholders might be rewarded w special bonus shld this pandemic end/or controlled 
DYODD
Actually ALL 3 banks can afford to pay the full value of its dividend as per 2019 this 1H 2020 / but due to MAS cap request. 
( their pay out ratio is aro 50%) 
Further GE alrdy has a nice set of result .....moving forward, a large provision wld be a factor but come 2021 
I guess shareholders might be rewarded w special bonus shld this pandemic end/or controlled 
DYODD
UBS also sees the central bank' s move as prudent, and believes it does not threaten the sustainability of payouts, Bloomberg reported. " Investors with a slightly longer-term horizon are likely to see this weakness as a buying opportunity," Mr Rawat said.
Goldman Sachs upped its target prices (TPs) for the trio, to S$27.40 for DBS with a " buy" call, and S$24.70 for UOB and S$10.34 for OCBC, both rated " neutral" .
DBS' analyst maintained " hold" calls on OCBC with a S$9.30 TP and UOB with a S$20.90 TP. OCBC Investment Research kept its " hold" ratings for DBS with a S$20 fair value, and for UOB with a S$21.50 fair value.
yes and some american funds are pushing it down too 
Starship ( Date: 30-Jul-2020 13:02) Posted:
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more impairment....
Siwomp ( Date: 30-Jul-2020 13:54) Posted:
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